The Federal Reserve kept the target range for the federal funds rate at 3.50% to 3.75%. That part was expected. The pressure came from the tone around inflation and the updated rate path: the market stopped reading the meeting as a clean road toward cuts.
For a short-term trader, the first lesson is simple: the headline is not the whole trade. A hold can still be hawkish if projections move higher, if inflation risks stay uncomfortable and if the chair avoids giving the market a soft forward signal.
What mattered: inflation remained the main problem, the 2026 rate path looked firmer than traders wanted, and the first market reaction leaned defensive. Stocks came under pressure, Bitcoin lost some risk appetite and gold traded like a market searching for the next real signal.
The clean trading plan is not to chase the first candle. Watch whether the S&P 500 holds support, whether Bitcoin keeps liquidity or breaks into a weaker range, and whether gold reacts more to real yields or to fear. If the chart is noisy, the best decision is to wait for the second reaction.
QX Hub take: this is the type of event where discipline beats prediction. Mark the levels before the next session, reduce size around news spikes and treat every post-Fed move as a test of liquidity, not as a guaranteed direction.








